Mine chose private out of state. The money difference is astronomical. |
+1 We have moved around in our 33+ years of marriage. Lived in 5 places, with 3 of them being 5 years, 13 years and 10 years and counting. We are in our final place now, have the retirement home(s). We will just travel as needed to see the kids. But we certainly didn't put our careers and aspirations on hold just to live nearby family. God help us if we had as where our parents lived was not a tech hub (we are both techies). We would have been miserable. Instead we did what we wanted, we travel to see family, when parents were able to travel we paid for them to come visit as often as they wanted. Our kids are still close to their grandparents, even if they didn't see them weekly/daily growing up |
DP: because you are insulting families whose kids do spread their wings and go more than 2-3 hours from home. You stated it's not the best thing if you have a loving family. Many of us disagree with that. My kids were not "escaping their unloving family" by attending college 2-3K miles from home. Instead they were fully supported to choose THE BEST FITTING COLLEGE for them and purse that. As a parent, that is the ultimate goal, to have your kid become a happy, successful adult who loves life. I chose where I live---it's not near my parents. My parents wanted to live on 3 acres and farm for themselves. That is not me or my husband. Why would I restrict my kids?!?!? |
All I know is that I will hear people say âyouâre so lucky you live near your kidsâ grandparents,â or âyouâre so lucky your adult children can come over for dinners.â Itâs not luck. Itâs families making it a priority to be in the same location. Nobody can say that itâs as easy to see their family that is 2k miles away as their family in the next town. |
Unless your family is horribly toxic, I think most would like to be able to be close to their families as they start families.
We have thought about moving my MIL here before (after my FIL passed), but that would take her from all her friends and the rest of the family. We have considered moving there and bringing my family (Iâm an only and my parents were willing). That didnât work out for us because of jobs, and because of the current political mess in that state, I canât say Iâm sad to not be there. We at one point considered getting legal custody of our niece and nephew. That has all shaken out ok, thankfully. Ideal world for us would be all our family and friends living in one place. But thatâs not the real world. You make the best of your situation. We still have good relationships with our families. We donât see them all the time, but the pros of us being where we are outweigh moving. Doesnât mean we donât have times being closer would be nice, but we have made peace with our situation and do the best we can to see them as we can. My mom thought I might move back home after college, but she also knew I made the best decision for me. Sheâs not mad at me-sheâs proud of me. If the perfect school for your kid is close to home, great. Itâs no guarantee they will come home after school is over, though. Just stop making assumptions about others and their families based on where their kid chooses to attend school. The one thing my mother REFUSED to do was limit my choices for school. Her dad limited her and she never got over it. |
I think part of it is people make excuses for why their kid didnât go to a better school - âtoo far awayâ and sometimes donât want to admit they could not afford anything but a local school (which is a legitimate reason in my book to stay close) . Distance, for college, does not diminish family values or connection. Thatâs ridiculous. I mean if someone joins the military and is deployed it doesnât mean their family is not close nor does it mean they donât make it a priority. |
One of mine really wants to go to UVA and one really wants to go to UCLA! I am really close to both. The one who wants to go to UCLA has asked if she could fly home every month. I told her not likely! She just started high school so at this point I know all of this could change a million times. |
Me too.. I did great in college after struggling some in HS. I support where ever my kid wants to go that we can afford. |
PP. Oh wow! Big congrats to them! I really did love the experience, and I hope your kid does, too. |
+1. This. It takes effort and sacrifice. Everyone complains about how lonely and miserable they are but they don't want to make the sacrifices to prioritize family. But they'll read a million self-help articles on how to overcome loneliness by going for walks. Honestly, the way we're moving forward as a society is really sad. Americans are miserable. |
This. When I hear that a child went to a local college and not the state flagship, I think âdidnât save, couldnât afford it and or didnât have the grades.â You can say family priorities until the cows come home, itâs merely validation. There is no way a kid declines Stanford if they have the chops and money to go. |
Your post at first compares a "local college" to a "state flagship" before bringing Stanford into the mix. At first, it sounds like you are saying you think people could not afford a stage college if they attend a "local" college? What is a "local college"? |
Explaining like youâre 5 years old. What is the state flagship in your state? A local state college is everything elseâŚâŚ. |
Mine did.
It works for us. We go weeks without seeing them. They are growing and enjoying their school for the most part. They had many options and chose the one they liked the best. They will have money leftover in their college savings account, so that will be rolled over into an IRA for them. They'll have an early start on retirement savings. I can see the benefit of going to another geographical area and the benefit of staying near home. I don't judge what people choose. Some want to explore, and some don't. Some have lots of money to pay for airline tickets and private or OOS schools, and some don't. They likely want to go into a field that has a lot of jobs in the DC area, so being here is a plus for them as far as their career goes. |
I agree with this. |